Thyroid hormones- synthesis, secretion, functions and disorders
Assessment, symptoms and signs of mental disorders
1. 18. Assessing the presence of mental disorder
INTRODUCTION
Assessment is the process of collecting information relevant to the diagnosis, man-
agement, and treatment of a patient's clinical condition, including distinguishing or
recognising the presence of disease or disorder from its symptoms or manifestations.
The mental state examination is equivalent to the detailed physical examination in
general medicine.1
Its purpose is to elicit and observe any signs and symptoms
indicative of mental disorder. Various medical terms are used to record and describe
what is observed and it is important to have an understanding of their meaning. In
addition to recording any symptoms and signs of disorder apparent on examining the
patient, the assessment includes conducting any tests necessary to establish a diagno-
sis, for example biochemical investigations or an EEG. The nature and purpose of
these tests are described later (1089). Mental illness may be seen as the response of
an individual to his life situation so that, as Hamilton has noted, one must always ask
the threefold question: "Why did this person break down, in this way, at this time?"2
More particularly, Sir Denis Hill has emphasised that it is necessary to investigate
the patient's psychic reality and experience and the bearing this has on his disorder;
it is also necessary to investigate the psycho-social environment and culture within
which the patient lives and works; and it is necessary to examined the patient as a
biological organism. The psychiatrist's capacity to know, after the initial interview,
to which area he should in the main direct his attention is dependant upon his clini-
cal experience and training, his skill in examination, but above all upon his detailed
knowledge of the clinical phenomena which mental disorder presents, and their
significance.3
SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS
A person may be diseased but "symptom-free" which is another way of saying that,
following the onset of disease, pathological changes may or may not make them-
selves evident. When they do, they are described as "manifestations" which, by
medical custom, are usually distinguished as "symptoms and signs."4
A sign is an
objective indication of a disease or disorder that is observed or detected by a doctor
upon examining and interviewing the patient, in contrast to a symptom which is not-
iced or reported by the patient. Symptoms are therefore what people complain of and
worry about so that the customary distinction is between an objective observation
1055
4
International Classification of Impairments, Disabilities, and Handicaps: A manual of classi-
fication relating to the consequences of disease (World Health Organisation, 1976), p.25.
3
Sir Denis Hill, in W.A. Lishman, Organic Psychiatry, The Psychological Consequences of
Cerebral Disorder (Blackwell Scientific Publications, 2nd. ed., 1987), page vii.
2
Fish's Outline of Psychiatry (rev. Max Hamilton, John Wright & Sons, 4th ed., 1984).
1
A. Sims and D. Owens, Psychiatry (Baillière Tindall, 6th ed., 1993), p.8.
2. and a subjective complaint.5
In practice, the distinction "often difficult to make
where psychological phenomena are concerned,"6
partly because certain phenomena
may be simultaneously experienced and reported by the patient and observed by his
doctor. In common usage, and in the text below, the term "symptoms" includes
objective signs of pathological conditions.
The purpose of recording the patient's symptoms
"Listen to the patient, he is telling you the diagnosis," the physician William Osler
once observed. The recording of a patient's symptoms is undertaken to identify the
type of mental disorder from which he suffers — symptoms being pointers towards
the underlying pathology — and, following on from this, the most appropriate form
of treatment and the patient's likely response to that treatment. As to the diagnostic
significance of symptoms, psychiatry often distinguishes between the form and
content of mental phenomena such as hallucinations and delusions. The content of
an idea may "be meaningful and understandable. But it is even more significant that
the idea is a delusion, and not merely an overvalued idea; that the hallucination is
occurring in a setting in which other people do not experience false perceptions; and
that the patient's difficulty in expressing himself coherently is not explicable in terms
of limited vocabulary or education, or emotional arousal."7
Thus, the form of an
experience (e.g. the fact that a person is experiencing visual hallucinations) is of
diagnostic value. However, the content of the experience (what the person imagines
he sees) is determined by the individual's background, has social and cultural
determinants, and is less often diagnostically significant.
The relative significance of symptoms
Even if not found in the normal population, and therefore indicative of a
pathological process, symptoms may exist as manifestations of several different
diseases or disorders and, when viewed in isolation, be incapable of sustaining any
single diagnosis.8
Very few clinical features give unequivocal information.9
The
importance of one finding may depend upon the presence or absence of others, so
that a symptom is most often known by the company it keeps. The early, generally
non-florid, symptoms of mental disorder are referred to as "prodromal features." A
symptom which is characteristic of a particular disease or disorder, and is alone
sufficient to establish a diagnosis, is said to be "pathognomonic." In many cases this
is simply because the disease is defined in terms of the particular feature. Where a
feature has to be present for the diagnosis of a disease, but its presence does not
1056
9
See G.W. Bradley, Disease, Diagnosis and Decisions (John Wiley & Sons, 1993), p.56.
8
For example, the persistent repetition of a word ("perseveration") may be a symptom of
schizophrenia but it may also be associated with an organic disorder and various other functional
disorders.
7
R.E. Kendell, "Schizophrenia: A Medical View of a Medical Concept" in What is Schizophrenia?
(ed. W.F. Flack et al., Springer-Verlag, 1990), p.69.
6
A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind (Baillière Tindall, London, 1988), p.6.
5
Thus, Kleinman writes that "the physician's task is to replace these biased observations with objec-
tive data: the only valid sign of pathological processes; they are based on verified or verifiable
measurements." A. Kleinman, "What is Specific to Western Medicine" in Companion Encyclopae-
dia of the History of Medicine (ed. W.F. Bynum & R. Porter, Routledge, 1993), Vol. 1, p.18. For
the avoidance of doubt, the signs therefore comprise abnormal behaviour observed by the examiner,
or described to him by others, and those abnormalities of subjective experience apparent upon
questioning the patient. Thus, the statement "I am God" is a sign of mental disorder whereas the
statement, "I feel depressed," is a symptom because it represents a subjective complaint by the
patient about the way he feels.
3. guarantee the diagnosis, because the same finding may be present in other diseases,
it is sometimes referred to as obligatory. Symptoms which are not pathognomonic or
obligatory may nevertheless be commonly present or valuable diagnostically. An
exclusionary feature is one which is the opposite of pathognomonic in that its
presence excludes a particular diagnosis. A symptom distinctive of an illness may
not be considered to have that significance because the classification is erroneous.
The severity of a symptom can be rated on a number of different criteria, such as
frequency, intensity, duration or degree of incapacitation or tolerability.10
ARRANGEMENT OF THE CHAPTER
The arrangement of the chapter, in terms of meaning of words used to describe
symptoms and signs commonly referred to in psychiatric reports is shown below.
1086The client's statements or behaviour may indicate
that he is experiencing hallucinations or other per-
ceptual disturbances.
Perception
1076Any of the following may be abnormal: the volume
or rate of speech; its articulation; the choice of
words; the association/juxtaposition of words and
phrases; the content of the patient's thoughts.
Speech, thought
1075The client may be anxious or fearful, causing irrit-
ability, agitation, panic, hostility or depression.
Anxiety, etc.
1073The client's emotional responsiveness (affect) or his
underlying mood may be abnormal.
Affect, mood
1070The client's answers may indicate problems mem-
orising or recalling information.
Memory
1067The client's physical state may suggest poor self-
care, poor nutrition or an organic disorder.
Physical signs
1062There may be evidence of involuntary movements.Movements
1060The client's posture, mannerisms or gestures may be
idiosyncratic
Posture, etc.
1059The patient may be markedly over-active or under-
active.
Level of activity
1059If the client's consciousness is unimpaired, he may
nevertheless be unresponsive.
Responsiveness
1058The client may be unconscious or his consciousness
obviously impaired.
Consciousness
SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS: ARRANGEMENT OF THE CHAPTER
1057
10
R. Manchanda, et al., "A Review of rating scales for measuring symptom changes in schizophrenia
research" in The Instruments of Psychiatric Research (ed. C. Thompson, John Wiley & Sons,
1989), p.61.
4. The reason for dealing with symptoms in this order reflects the order in which they
are likely to become apparent to a lay observer. Important information about the pa-
tient's mental state may be conveyed before any examination or interview takes
place, simply by observing him. It may be apparent that the client is inaccessible,
either because his consciousness is impaired or because he is unresponsive. The pa-
tient may be markedly over-active or under-active. His posture (the relative position
of the different parts of the body at rest or during movement) or certain mannerisms
or gestures may be idiosyncratic. In some cases, his general appearance may be
suggestive of self-neglect. Involuntary movements may be conspicuous, perhaps aff-
ecting the individual's gait (style or manner of walking). Following the interview's
commencement, other symptoms and signs of mental disorder may become apparent.
It may be noticeable that his memory is impaired or that his mood or emotional state
is abnormal. There may be evidence of disordered thought processes or the content
of the patient's thought may be abnormal. This may be a consequence of the fact that
he is experiencing abnormal perceptions, such as hallucinations.
IMPAIRED CONSCIOUSNESS OR RESPONSIVENESS
Consciousness is the awareness of one's own internal thoughts and feelings together
with the ability to recognise one's external environment. It is important to appreciate
that a person may be fully conscious and yet profoundly unresponsive to his
immediate environment.
Impaired consciousness
To be unconscious is to have no subjective experience. Consciousness is a continu-
um with full alertness and awareness at one end and brain death at the other.
Full alertness/
awareness
Clouding of
Consciousness
ComaSopor Brain
death
w Clouding of consciousness describes impairment of orientation, perception
and attention and it is seen in organic mental disorders. There is difficulty
with thinking, attention, perception, memory and usually drowsiness11
but
sometimes excitability. Such clouding is seen in some organic mental
disorders.
w Semi-coma (sopor) — In cases of semi-coma (sopor), there is a partial
response to stimulation which is incomplete and mostly non-purposive; the
movements are ineffectual such as scratching the stimulated area.
w Coma lies at the opposite end of the spectrum from full alertness and
awareness of the environment.12
The Glasgow coma scale is used to grade
the degree or level of coma.
1058
12
W.A. Lishman, Organic Psychiatry, The Psychological Consequences of Cerebral Disorder
(Blackwell Scientific Publications, 2nd. ed., 1987), p.5.
11
Drowsiness is also sometimes used as a general word describing a state of consciousness between
full wakefulness and unconsciousness or sleep.
5. Disorientation, attention and concentration
Disorientation is a loss of awareness of oneself in relation to time (the date or time
of day), place (where one is) or identity (whether one's own or others), as a result of
which speech and behaviour tend to be muddled. Disorientation may be the product
of clouding of consciousness, a head injury, a chronic brain disorder such as demen-
tia, or the result of intoxication. To be attentive is to be alert, aware and responsive,
while to concentrate is to focus and sustain mental activity on a particular task.13
Poor attention and concentration are usually the result of tiredness or disinterest. In
some cases, the conscious patient's apparent lack of attentiveness simply reflects the
fact that his attention is focused elsewhere — distractibility. If a patient is distract-
ible, his attention and conversation changes from topic to topic in accordance with
stimuli from within or without, for example in response to visual hallucinations.
More rarely, impaired attention or concentration is indicative of clouding of
consciousness.
Confusion and confusional states
A confusional state is a disorganised mental state in which the abilities to remember,
think clearly and reason are impaired. The confusion may be acute or chronic.
Delirium is a state of acute mental confusion in which the activity of the brain is
affected by fever, drugs, poisons or injury. Chronic confusional states may be the
product of long-term use of anxiolytics, dementia or some other organic disorder.
Stupor (awareness accompanied by profound lack of responsiveness)
It is not necessarily the case that a patient who is inaccessible is in a state of coma or
sopor. The absence of any obvious signs of activity, movement or response to
external stimuli does not of itself mean that consciousness is impaired: a person may
be fully conscious and yet profoundly unresponsive to his immediate environment.
Consequently, when a person is motionless, and both speech and spontaneous
movement are absent or minimal, this lack of response to external stimuli may be
misinterpreted as unawareness of it. While terms such as coma and sopor describe a
substantial impairment of consciousness, stupor describes a profound lack of
responsiveness to external stimuli and the environment rather than profound
unawareness of it.14
The two components of stupor are sometimes described as
akinesia (a voluntary absence of any movement) and muteness (a voluntary ab-
sence of any speech).15
Where a state of stupor appears to form part of a catatonic
schizophrenic illness, it is usually described as catatonic stupor. Catatonic stupor is
defined in the DSM Glossary (1119) as a marked decrease in reactivity to the
environment and reduction in spontaneous movements and activity, sometimes to the
point of appearing to be unaware of one's surroundings.
Retardation and psychomotor retardation (a slowing of activity)
Retardation is a general slowing down of the conscious patient's mental and bodily
functions — a slowing of his thoughts, speech, actions, reactions and movement.
The term psychomotor retardation emphasises that this retardation has a psychic
1059
15
See e.g. A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind, supra.
14
W.A. Lishman, Organic Psychiatry, The Psychological Consequences of Cerebral Disorder
(Blackwell Scientific Publications, 2nd. ed., 1987), p.6.
13
A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind (Baillière Tindall, London, 1988).
6. cause, such as depression or catatonic schizophrenia, rather than some neurological
cause.
Marked overactivity
Over-activity for substantial periods of time, evidenced by over-talkativeness,
restlessness, pacing rapidly up and down, constant talking or loud singing is known
as pressure of activity. In manic states, such pressure of activity is often
accompanied by correspondingly accelerated speech, grandiosity and elation.
Catatonic excitement and catatonic agitation
The phrase catatonic excitement is used in the DSM classification (1119) to
describe excited motor activity which is apparently purposeless and not influenced
by external stimuli. The term catatonic agitation is preferred in the ICD glossary
(1117), where it refers to a state in which the psychomotor features of anxiety are
associated with catatonic syndromes. In both cases, the patient's restlessness and
activity are associated with his abnormal ideas and perceptions rather than with his
mood state (the degree of elation or depression present).
POSTURE, GESTURES AND MANNERISMS
The word attitude is most often used in psychiatry to denote a patient's posture or
position rather than his personal viewpoint. In cases of catatonic schizophrenia,
where a client's preoccupation with overwhelming incapacitating ideas or per-
ceptions has rendered him unresponsive, this unresponsiveness may be accompanied
by prolonged, stereotyped, postures.
MANNERISTIC AND STEREOTYPED POSTURES
A patient's posture may sometimes be described as manneristic or stereotyped.
Conventionally, manneristic postures differ from stereotyped postures in that the
former are not rigidly maintained.
Catatonic posturing
The term catatonic posturing describes the voluntary assumption of an
inappropriate or bizarre posture which is usually held for a long period of time. For
example, a patient standing with arms out-stretched as if he were Jesus on the cross.
1060
Normal range of Stupor
responsiveness
Catatonic
stupor
Catatonic
excitement
Pressure of
activity
Psychomotor
retardation
7. Body maintained in a semi-rigid position ("waxy rigidity")
The terms catalepsy and catatonic waxy flexibility — and, also, the latter's Latin
variant, flexibilitas cerea — are synonymous. They describe a physical state of
sudden onset in which the muscles of the face, body and limbs are maintained by
increased muscle tone in a semi-rigid position, possibly for several hours, during
which time neither expression or body position changes. Voluntary movement and
sensibility are suspended, respiration and pulse are slowed, and body temperature
falls. The affected person's limbs can be moulded into any position. When moved in
this way, they feel as if made of a pliable wax which enables these externally
imposed postures to be maintained. Phenomena of the kind described are observed
in catatonic schizophrenia and a number of other conditions.
Body maintained in a rigid position ("iron-pipe rigidity")
Waxlike postures may also appear with rigid rather than flexible musculature.
Consequently, a distinction is sometimes drawn between flexible and rigid catalepsy
(catatonic or iron-pipe rigidity). In the former case, a posture is assumed at the
slightest external prompting; in the latter, the patient's self-assumed posture resists
external attempts at modification and is maintained by the person against all efforts
to be moved.
MANNERISMS, GESTURES OR RITUALS
A person's mannerisms, gestures or rituals may sometimes be highly distinctive and
strikingly unusual.
Mannerisms and gestures
A mannerism is a gesture or expression peculiar to a person, such as an odd way of
walking or eating. If the mannerism involves taking up an idiosyncratic posture,
rather than idiosyncratic movement, it may be referred to as a manneristic posture
(supra). Mannerisms differ from spontaneous, involuntary, movements (dyskinesias,
1065) in that they are voluntary, if idiosyncratic, movements. They differ from
stereotyped behaviour in that the latter is carried out in an unvarying, repetitive,
manner and is not goal-directed.
Repetitive or imitative behaviour
While manneristic behaviour is directed towards some goal (eating in the above
example), stereotypy is not. Stereotyped behaviour, or stereotypy, is the constant,
almost mechanical repetition of an action. For example, pacing the same circle each
day, head-banging, rocking or repetitive hand movements, or repeating some phrase
over many weeks or months. Stereotyped movements are often rhythmic.
Echopraxia, which is sometimes a feature of catatonic schizophrenia, refers to the
imitative repetitive copying of the movements of another person.
Negativism (contrary behaviour) and catatonic negativism
Negativism is opposition or resistance, whether covert or overt, to outside
suggestions or advice. For example, a person drops his arm when asked to raise it.
Catatonic negativism is a resistance to all instructions or attempts to be moved. The
1061
8. person may do the opposite of what is asked, firmly clenching the jaws in response
to being asked to open his mouth.
Automatic obedience (command automatism)
The opposite of negativism is automatic compliance which may be so marked that
the individual does more than is required to comply with any instructions. For
example, a person who is asked to raise an arm raises both of them in an exag-
gerated manner. Such undue or automatic compliance is associated with catatonic
syndromes and hypnotic states.
Compulsive or ritualistic behaviour
A compulsion is an irresistible impulse to perform an irrational act. The individual
experiences a powerful urge to act or behave in a way he recognises is irrational or
senseless and which he attributes to subjective necessity rather than to external
influences. Performing the particular act may relieve tension. Compulsive behaviour
may be attributable to obsessional ideas. For example, a young adult may become
obsessed with the idea that his shoelaces must be perfectly tied, continually retying
them for twenty minutes, and unable to move on to the next stage of dressing until
this objective has been achieved; or he may continually close the refrigerator door
until it eventually makes the "right" sound.
Compulsive acts and obsessive thoughts
It can be seen that the terms "obsession" and "compulsion" are not synonymous. The
former refers to a thought and the latter to an act. Obsessions are recurrent, persis-
tent ideas, thoughts, images, or impulses that are not experienced as voluntarily
produced but as ideas, urges or representations which invade consciousness. A
thought may properly be described as obsessional if a person cannot prevent himself
from repeatedly, insistently, having that thought albeit that the content of the thought
is not delusional in nature. Obsessive thoughts lie behind compulsive acts, and
stereotyped or manneristic behaviour, but they may exist without being externally
manifested in the form of an observable repetitive action.
ABNORMAL GAIT OR MOVEMENTS
On observing a patient, some uncontrollable movement of the body, affecting the
face, head, trunk or limbs, may be apparent. Disordered movement may be the result
of damage to the brain or nervous system, damage to the muscles, or the result of a
biochemical imbalance, which may be medication related. It should be noted that
terms such as tremor, chorea, myoclonus, tics, dystonia, and athetosis are imprecise
and descriptive rather than definitive. They are not confined to particular anatomical,
physiological, or pathological abnormalities. Nevertheless, their use cannot be
avoided and they furnish the clinician with terms that have some practical meaning.16
The way in which abnormal movements are categorised may be summarised as
follows—
1062
16
J.D. and J.A. Spillane, An Atlas of Clinical Neurology (Oxford Medical Publications, 1982), p.263.
9. w The most prominent functions of muscle tissue are to maintain posture and
produce motion.
w The co-ordination of muscular activity involved in maintaining posture and
balance mostly takes place below the level of consciousness. By contrast, the
movement of joints is mainly under voluntary control of the brain and
consciously intended.
w The term "involuntary movement" is used in two different senses. Firstly,
movements which occur below the level of consciousness are said to be
involuntary movements. Such involuntary movements are, however, entirely
normal. Secondly, the execution of voluntary, willed, movements may be
disrupted by unwilled and uncontrollable involuntary movements of the
body, usually affecting the face, head, trunk or limbs. In this sense, all
movement disorders are involuntary even when the disruption involves an
interference with voluntary movement.
w Akinesia (literally, without movement) denotes an absence or lack of volun-
tary movement while dyskinesia (literally, bad or difficult movement) is a
general term used to describe difficult or distorted voluntary movement.17
w Information about the state of contraction and stretch of the muscles is
transmitted to the brain via nerve fibres contained in each muscle. Nerve
impulses transmitted in the other direction, to the muscles, stimulate them,
releasing a type of neurotransmitter called acetylcholine. This starts a chain
of chemical and electrical events, involving sodium, calcium and potassium
ions, which cause the muscle to contract. Potassium depletion causes muscle
weakness while a decrease of calcium may cause muscle spasm.
w Contracting a muscle makes it shorter and draws together the bones to which
the muscle is attached. Where two or more muscles oppose each other's
actions, harmony of posture and movement requires their co-ordinated
relaxation and contraction.
w Apraxia is an inability to carry out a voluntary ("purposive") movement
despite normal muscle power and co-ordination. The defect is caused by
damage to the nerve tracts which translate the idea of movement into actual
movement. The person knows that he wants to move in a certain way or
direction but has lost the ability to recall from memory the sequence of
actions necessary to achieve the desired movement.
w Ataxia (literally, without order) is an inability to co-ordinate muscles in the
execution of voluntary movement. The typical ataxic gait is lurching and
unsteady like that of a drunkard, with the feet widely placed and a tendency
to reel to one side. This lack of co-ordination and clumsiness may affect
balance and gait, limb or eye movements, and cause speech to be slurred.
1063
17
However, while akinesia literally means an absence or lack of voluntary movement, it "has become
the term of choice for the state of difficulty in initiating movements or changing from one motor
pattern to another that is associated with Parkinson's disease." Lexicon of Psychiatric and Mental
Health Terms (World Health Organisation, 1989), Vol. 1, p.7 .
10. w Rapid, rhythmic, alternate contraction and relaxation of a group of muscles
produces tremor (1066). This is associated with exertion and emotional
arousal, and is commonly experienced by older people, but occasionally has
a greater medical significance.
w Skeletal muscle is maintained in a state of partial contraction because this
helps to maintain posture, keeps the eyes open, and allows the muscles to
contract more efficiently. This natural muscular tension is referred to as
muscle tone. Tone therefore denotes the natural tension in the fibres of a
muscle while dystonia literally means bad muscle tone. Abnormally high
muscle tone causes spasticity, rigidity and resistance to movement.
Abnormally low muscle tone (hypotonia) causes floppiness of the body or
part of the body affected.
w An individual's muscle tone may reflect his emotional state. Strong emotion
may produce a sudden loss of muscle tone, causing the individual to collapse
— cataplexy. Cataplexy commonly lasts for a number of seconds and, in
three-quarters of cases, it is characteristic of narcolepsy. There is no loss of
consciousness.
w Abnormally increased muscle tone produces muscular rigidity and in-
creased resistance to movement. Muscular rigidity is therefore the result of
increased tone in one or more muscles, causing them to feel tight, with the
affected part of the body becoming stiff and inflexible. Muscular rigidity
may result in unusually fixed postures, strange movement patterns, or pain-
ful muscular spasms.
w Spasms are powerful, brief, rapid, repetitive contractions of a muscle or
group of muscles which are experienced as spasmodic, muscular, jerks.
Hiccups, cramp, tics and habit-spasms are all types of muscular spasm. Tics
and habit-spasms may both reflect and help to release emotional tension
during periods of stress and so be particularly prominent at times of psycho-
logical disturbance.
w Muscles usually respond to being stretched by contracting once and then
relaxing. Where stretching sets off a rapid series of muscle contractions, this
is referred to as clonus (a word meaning "turmoil"). Clonus is therefore an
abnormal response of a muscle to stretching and it is suggestive of damage
or disease to the nerve fibres carrying impulses to that muscle. Clonic
muscle contractions are a feature of seizures in grand mal epilepsy.
w If clonic muscular contractions are rapid and shock-like, they may be
referred to as myoclonus. Myoclonus (literally, muscular turmoil) is a
sudden, brief, shock-like, uncontrollable, jerking or spasm of a muscle or
muscles ("myoclonic jerks"), which may occur either at rest or during
movement. Hemifacial spasms (irregular shock-like contractions of the
muscles on one side of the face) are a form of myoclonus.
1064
11. DYSKINESIA
Dyskinesia (literally, bad or difficult movement) is a general term covering various
forms of abnormal movement, including tremor, tics, ballismus, chorea, habit-
spasm, torticollis, torsion-spasm, athetosis, chorea, dystonia, and myoclonus.18
Such
conditions typically involve uncontrollable movements of the trunk or limbs which
cannot be suppressed and impair the execution of voluntary movements. The whole
body may be involved or the problem restricted to a particular group of muscles.
Athetosis (exaggerated, sinuous, writhing movement of muscles)
The term denotes the slow, irregular, and continuous twisting of muscles in the distal
(far) portions of the arms and legs. These sinuous movements are bilateral (evident
on both sides of the body) and symmetric (both sides are similarly affec- ted).
Characteristically, there are exaggerated writhing motions of the fingers, which are
spread in a manner reminiscent of a snake-charmer, with alternate flexion and
extension of the wrists, and twisting of the muscles in the hands, fingers, feet and
toes. The hands and fingers appear to be in continuous motion and the inability to
maintain them in a fixed position causes difficulty with writing and tasks such as
fastening buttons. When the feet are involved, the ankles and toes intermittently turn
inwards, producing an irregular, unbalanced gait. In severe cases, there is grimacing,
protrusion of the tongue and abnormal articulation of speech. The patient may be
able to regain some control over these movements by way of concentration and they
are absent during sleep.
Chorea and choreic movements (irregular, spasmodic, jerky)
Chorea is a Greek word meaning dance (as in choreography). Chorea is
characterised by quick, irregular, spasmodic and jerky involuntary movement of
muscles, usually affecting the face, limbs and trunk. The movements resemble
voluntary movements but are continuously interrupted prior to being completed.
They also disappear or are less prominent during sleep. There is a general air of rest-
lessness in chronic patients and an excess of motor activity with impaired ability to
maintain a posture. Those parts of the limbs closest to the trunk (the proximal
portions) are more affected than those further away (the distal portions) and the
trunk itself may be affected. The movements are more rapid and involve more
muscle groups than athetotic movements. Unlike tics, they are not predictable and
occur at random. Although bilateral, the muscular movements are asynchronous
rather than symmetric, that is the chorea frequently affects one side of the body more
than the other. Hemichorea is chorea affecting one side of the body only.
Choreo-athetoid movements
Choreic and athetotic movements may exist in conjunction, when their combined
effect is referred to as choreo-athetosis. The movements may be caused by various
pathological processes, including pathological processes initiated as a side-effect of
certain drugs.
1065
18
Lexicon of Psychiatric and Mental Health Terms (World Health Organisation, 1989), Vol. 1, p.37.
12. Tardive dyskinesia (involuntary muscle movements late in treatment)
Tardive means tardy, late. The term tardive dyskinesia refers to a type of movement
disorder which appears late in treatment, characteristically after long-term treat-
ment with antipsychotic drugs.19
The whole body may be involved or the problem
restricted to a particular group of muscles. Involuntary, slow, irregular movements
of the tongue, lips, mouth, and trunk, and choreo-athetoid movements of the
extremities are common. In particular, there may be twisting and protruding
movements of the tongue, chewing movements of the jaw, and puckering of the lips.
These uncontrollable movements cannot be suppressed.20
Tremor
A tremor may be described as a rhythmic, repetitive movement of some part of the
body which results from the alternating contractions of opposing muscle groups.
There is, however, no single standard description of what movement constitutes
tremor.21
Tremors may be described as fine (6–10 muscle movements per second) or
coarse (4–5 muscle movements per second). They may be caused by antipsychotics
or antidepressants, withdrawal from drugs or alcohol.
A persistent, fine-moderate tremor (6–10 movements per second)
not associated with disease. The tremors are fine, mainly affecting
the hand and head. They are common in adults, tend to increase
with age and to be aggravated by emotional tension, may be tem-
porarily relieved by alcohol, and may affect particular occupations.
They may increase when the affected part of the body is moved.
Essential tremor
Action tremors occur mainly, or are most marked, when a
movement is attempted, with the result that the patient's purpose is
frustrated. Hence, they are commonly tested for by asking the
patient to touch the tip of his nose with the tip of his finger; as the
finger approaches the nose the intention tremor increases.
Action (intention)
tremor
Postural tremor is a fine tremor activated during attempts to sustain
a posture (e.g., extending an arm, supporting a leg, holding up the
head, turning back the wrists) but absent when the limb is
supported and at rest.
Postural tremor
At-rest tremors are worse when the affected part of the body is
relaxed, supported and at rest, usually improving when the affected
limb is used.
At-rest tremor
TYPES OF TREMOR
1066
21
J.D. and J.A. Spillane, An Atlas of Clinical Neurology (Oxford Medical Publications, 3rd ed.,
1982), p.263.
20
Lexicon of Psychiatric and Mental Health Terms (World Health Organisation, 1989), Vol. 1,
pp.37–38. The term (oro-) facial dyskinesia is sometimes used to describe repetitive smacking,
grimacing, champing, chewing, and swallowing movements involving the lips, tongue, and jaw.
19
In contrast, dystonic reactions to medication usually appear after a few doses.
13. Tics (habit-spasms)
A tic is a repeated, uncontrolled, purposeless contraction of a muscle or group of
muscles. For example, superficially purposeless blinking, mouth twitching, shrugg-
ing, or the involuntary contraction of the diaphragm (which results in grunting
noises). These habitual, spasmodic, muscular contractions tend to be experienced as
irresistible, but they can usually be suppressed for varying periods of time and they
disappear during sleep.22
Tics release emotional tension and are generally a sign of
minor psychological disturbance, being made worse at times of stress. Occasionally,
they are severe, as in Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome.
AKATHISIA (INABILITY TO SIT STILL)
Akathisia is a restless inability to sit still ("a motor restlessness") associated with a
feeling of muscular quivering. It is often seen as a side-effect of neuroleptic
medication or as a complication of Parkinson's disease.23
It may be so intense that
the person affected finds it impossible to sit still, day or night.
DYSTONIA (MUSCULAR RIGIDITY CAUSING SPASMS)
Dystonic means relating to abnormal muscular tension and, strictly speaking, the
term encompasses both excessive or exaggerated tone and deficient or absent tone.
However, in common usage, the term describes an abnormal muscular rigidity
causing painful and sustained muscle spasms of some part of the body, unusually
fixed postures, or strange movement patterns. Dystonic movements usually take the
form of a twisting or turning motion of the neck, the trunk, or the proximal parts of
the extremities. They are therefore powerful and deforming, grossly interfering with
voluntary movement, and perverting posture.24
Acute dystonia may occur as a
transient complication of neuroleptic medication. Torsion dystonia25
— torsion
means twisting — is a term sometimes used to describe involuntary movements of a
slow, powerful character, which produce tension and torsion spasm of the limbs and
spine. The consequential abnormalities of gait may be quite bizarre.26
Wry neck or
torticollis (Latin for "crooked neck") is a common example of torsion dystonia. It
describes a twisting of the neck which causes the head to be rotated and tilted into an
abnormal position, in which it remains.27
PHYSICAL SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS
Physical health problems may be real or imaginary and also the product of a person's
mental state rather than its cause. A conversion symptom is a loss or alteration of
physical functioning that suggests a physical disorder, but that is actually a direct
1067
27
Some writers categorise writer's cramp and blepharospasm (the involuntary, prolonged contraction
of one of the muscles that controls the eyelids, causing the eyes to close) as forms of dystonia.
26
J.D. and J.A. Spillane, An Atlas of Clinical Neurology, supra, p.281 et seq.
25
Torsion dystonia is also sometimes referred to as Dystonia Musculorum Deformans or as
Generalised Torsion Dystonia. It is usually familial and particularly common among Jews of
Russian descent.
24
J.D. and J.A. Spillane, An Atlas of Clinical Neurology (Oxford Medical Publications, 3rd ed.,
1982).
23
R.J. Campbell, Psychiatric Dictionary (Oxford University Press, 6th ed., 1989), p. 24.
22
Lexicon of Psychiatric and Mental Health Terms (World Health Organisation, 1989), p.102.
14. expression of a psychological conflict or need. The disturbance is not under
voluntary control, and is not explained by any physical disorder. Hypochondriasis
denotes an unrealistic belief or fear that one is suffering from a serious illness
despite medical reassurance.
Pronounced weight loss is seen in eating disorders, depression, physical
illness.
Weight
Skin problems are most often an adverse effect of medication. The greater
the amount of melanin present the darker the colouration. Darkened skin
may therefore be caused not only of exposure to the sun but by a hormo-
nal disorder such as Addison's disease or Cushing's Syndrome. It may
also be caused by an excess of other types of pigments in the blood, such
as the bile pigment bilirubin (in jaundice) or iron.
Skin
Psychotropic medication may cause sexual problems. Antipsychotics may
be associated with enlargement of the breasts in men. In other cases, the
absence of menstrual periods may be a feature of anorexia nervosa, an
endocrinal disorder, Turner's Syndrome, or secondary to emotional stress
or depression, or a side-effect of certain drugs.
Genitalia
As to movement disorders, see 1062. Truncal obesity with relatively thin
matchstick legs and a buffalo-hump are classically features of Cushing's
syndrome.
Trunk
As to movement disorders, see 1062.Limbs
Facies is the expression of the face. Hirsuties, mooning and reddening of
the face may be features of Cushing's syndrome.
Face
Lid-lag is a momentary delay in the normal downward movement of the
upper eyelids that occurs when the eye looks down. In Lid retraction, a
rim of white sclera is seen above the iris when the patient looks ahead.
Both are characteristic of hyperthyroidism . Ptosis is the drooping of an
upper eyelid when the eyes are open.
Eyelids
Nystagmus is a condition in which there is involuntary movement of the
eyes, usually horizontally and in a manner resembling the action of
windscreen wipers. Occasionally, only one eye is affected. Persistent
nystagmus appearing in later life usually indicates a disorder of the
nervous system such as multiple sclerosis, brain tumour or an alcohol
related disorder. An oculogyric crisis is a state of fixed gaze lasting
minutes or hours in which the eyes are turned in a particular direction,
usually upwards, sometimes with accompanying spasms of the head,
mouth and neck. This may be drug-induced, the product of emotional
stress, a sequela of encephalitis or a sign of Parkinson's Disease.
Exophthalmus is protrusion of the eye ball and is indicative of a thyroid
disorder. Photophobia means an uncomfortable sensitivity or intolerance
to light. It is most often seen as an adverse effect of antipsychotic medica-
tion although it may be a feature of meningitis. Blepharospasm is the
involuntary, prolonged contraction of one of the muscles that controls the
eyelids, causing the eyes to close. This may be the result of photophobia,
an inflammation of the eyelids, anxiety or hysteria.
Eyes
PHYSICAL SIGNS
1068
15. Disturbed sleep
Insomnia is a general term denoting dissatisfaction with the duration or quality of
sleep. In depression, the sufferer commonly wakes early in the morning, often
between 3am and 5am — early morning waking. In contrast, the tendency in
anxiety states is to experience difficulty getting to sleep — initial insomnia.
Narcolepsy describes short periods of sleep which occur irresistibly during the day.
Hypersomnia means an excess of sleep, whether at night or because of periods of
day-time somnolence. In manic states, the over-active individual feels a decreased
need for sleep and may go several days without sleeping. Somnambulism means
sleep-walking. More often, what a client describes as sleep-walking is in fact a night
terror, which occurs early on during sleep. The individual imagines that there is a
person at the window or that the ceiling is about to fall in and suffocate him. Feeling
that he is in profound danger, he may run from the bedroom in a state of panic. On
coming to, he is amnesic for the event and is initially confused about how he came
to be in another room or outdoors. Some people suffering from schizophrenia may
feel that other people have entered their room and that they have been violated
during sleep, either sexually or in some other way. For example, the patient's hair
was cut.
General appearance and physical signs
Physical signs may be pointers to the fact that the patient's mental state has an
organic cause and the table on the previous page lists some of these features. The
patient's physical health may also be a pointer towards his mental health in other,
generally obvious, ways. There may be signs of recent physical injury, possibly
sustained in the course of the suicide attempt. Superficial, multiple, lacerations of
the arms and wrists are most often not indicative of attempted suicide but a way of
relieving acute tension. "Track-marks" on the arms may indicate the use of inject-
able street drugs. What may cruelly be referred to as physical deformities are some-
times, for that very reason, relevant to the client's mental health since they carry with
them a considerable psychological burden.
Self-care and self-neglect
If a patient has not washed, shaved or recently changed his clothes, or is
inadequately dressed given the temperature and conditions on the ward, this may be
a sign of poor self-care due to an incapacitating mental disorder. Self-neglect of this
kind may be a consequence of the negative symptoms of schizophrenia, and part of a
general picture of apathy, poor motivation and social withdrawal. In other cases,
poor self-care may be attributable to grandiose delusions (the client has let his beard
grow and cultivated a Jesus-like appearance); depression with retardation or stupor;
dementia; mental impairment; and obsessive-compulsive disorders characterised by
incapacitating rituals about dressing and bathing.
Other reasons for dishevelled appearance
There are, of course, many other reasons why a patient's general appearance may be
poor, including poverty, the sedative effects of medication, an inefficient hospital
laundry service, and the fact that no one has collected any spare clothing or toiletries
for him since he was detained.
1069
16. IMPAIRED MEMORY
Memory enables us to give order and meaning to the world (to classify information)
and so to predict events and affect their outcomes. Learning depends on memory for
its permanency while memory has no content if learning is not taking place. The
capacity for new learning is sometimes referred to as "current memorising" and it
has the most important clinical implications. Memory failure is a sensitive indicator
of cerebral dysfunction. Amnesia is a general term which describes loss of memory
manifested by a total or partial inability to recall past experiences. Amnesic con-
ditions affect mainly long-term memory. The amnesia may be for events immed-
iately prior to a head injury ( retrograde) or for events occurring following such a
trauma (anterograde28
).
Information which is committed to memory
The following kinds of information are committed to memory —
w internal perceptions or representations of events external to the brain,
sometimes in a distorted form (sense data);
w internal perceptions or representations generated internally within the brain
(imaginations);
w thoughts (the analysis and interpretation of sense data and imaginations);
w feelings (the emotional connotations associated with stored information).
Data is therefore given a meaning and a feeling and, when recalled, may be
reinterpreted: recalled events are reanalysed, rearranged or re-evaluated in light of
subsequent information and restored in an amended form. The need to also record
any thoughts and feelings associated with each piece of memorised information is
essential to survival and learning. Not only must the sequence of events be recalled
but also any information associated with it about the quality of the experience and
the outcome: whether it was desirable or undesirable, whether a particular response
or reaction alleviated or exacerbated the situation, and so forth. Without this, it is
impossible to develop judgement and to avoid repeatedly making the same mistake
and, consequently, impaired judgement is often a consequence of impaired memory.
In rare cases, there may be complete indifference to a situation, as if the emotion
associated with a given event has been dissociated from it.
Memorising (registering and storing information)
Memorising is the ability to register and retain what is experienced. Not everything
which registers on the sense receptors is stored. About one-hundredth of the sensory
information reaches consciousness and of this about one-twentieth may be stored in
some form. Sensory input is retained within the immediate memory for about half a
second in an essentially unanalysed form. The short-term memory allows the
relevance of a limited amount of data to be evaluated, generally by reference to a
framework formed by past experience. Material which is considered to be relevant to
1070
28
The glossary to the Internal Classification of Diseases uses the term "amnestic."
17. the individual's situation is fitted into the long-term memory. Information is
therefore memorised at three different levels —
w Immediate memory (sensory storage). Information is held for less than a
second in the form in which it was perceived before being replaced by other
incoming stimuli. Sensory memory seems to be modality specific: storage
occurs within the sensory system that received the information and not at
some central location. Additional information entering the same sensory
channel immediately disrupts the storage.29
w Primary memory (short-term or working memory). Some new material is
stored for evaluation in the short-term memory. Approximately six or seven
items of information can be stored in the working memory for up to 20
seconds. The method used by the brain to store this information (the "code")
appears to be primarily acoustic: information is converted into sound and
stored in this form. Because this is so, rehearsal and repetition by mental or
verbal speech — for example, repeating a telephone number to oneself or
out loud — can increase the memory's duration beyond 20 seconds. Some
types of schizophrenia are marked by repetition of this kind and problems
emptying the working memory. As new items are added to the short-term
memory, previous ones are lost, either disappearing or, where required for
future use, being committed to long-term memory.
w Secondary memory (long-term memory). Some new information is fitted
into an organized body of knowledge in which case a permanent trace is
formed, although this may later be modified by subsequent activity. The
capacity of the long-term memory store is large and such memories may
endure for the rest of an individual's life. Information is stored in coded
form, either semantically (verbal meaning), visually (pictorially), acousti-
cally, or by association with previously stored information. This accounts for
the predominance of hallucinations and thought disorder (e.g. loosening of
associations and idiosyncratic use of vocabulary and language) in schizo-
phrenia; and also the fact that, because little is known about the mechanisms
involved in memory, little is known about that illness. Indeed, both schizo-
phrenia and memory are hypothetical constructs.
SHORT-TERM
STORAGE
LONG-TERM
STORAGE
REGISTRATION
— SENSORY
Working memory
CAPACITY
DURATION
CODING (REPRESENTATION)
Repository
1071
29
Richard D. Gross, Psychology, The Science of Mind and Behaviour (Hodder & Stoughton, 2nd ed.,
1992), p. 311.
18. Remembering and recognizing things
Remembrance involves the ability to retrieve, recall and reproduce what has been
learned or experienced. A new situation requiring the utilization of the information
stored in the trace has to be recognized and the required information retrieved, that is
isolated from the rest of the stored materials. Recognition is the awareness that
something which is now happening is familiar and it involves forming associations
between what is now happening and what has previously been memorised. If a
person is faced with an unfamiliar fact, place or event, whether because it is new to
him or because he fails to recognise that he has previously encountered essentially
the same situation, he may feel perplexed or disorientated.
Memory problems
The individual's capacity to record what he is registering and to retain it, that is to
store knowledge, may be divided into immediate, recent and remote memory.
Immediate or short-term memory is often tested by giving the patient seven numbers
and asking him to repeat them forwards and then backwards; by telling him a name
and address and asking him to repeat it verbatim after a single hearing; and by
giving him three objects to remember. When the long-term memory is tested, a
distinction is usually drawn between "recent" and "remote" memory. Recent mem-
ory is tested by asking the patient a question about his activities during the previous
48 hours and then checking the accuracy of his account with a nurse. Remote
memory involves remembering events which were memorised a considerable period
ago, for instance the client's wedding day or first day at school. If a person cannot
remember or accurately remember information, the problem may lie at any one or
more of the stages which comprise the memory process. The inability may be due to
a failure to register or store the information in the first place (no record was ever
made); the loss or degradation of the record because of defective retention or an
intervening decision to erase it; an inability to locate the record (the information is
available but not accessible, because it was not systematically stored or cannot be
systematically searched for). More particularly,
w Much information is not selected for storage because its relevance and utility
are not considered to warrant this. Other events are so stressful for an
individual that they are deliberately not committed to long-term memory. In
yet other cases, the individual's capacity to register what is happening, that is
to add to his memory store, may be reduced. This incapacity may be temp-
orary, as where fatigue limits the amount of information which can be
assimilated, or indicative of a more profound problem.
w The individual's capacity to retain and record what he is registering and to
retain it may be defective. Impairment of recent memory may be an early
finding in dementias.
w Certain memorised information is later forgotten. This may represent
deliberate erasure following a decision that the information is no longer
useful or there may be some problem retrieving and recalling stored inform-
ation. Stored information will be "forgotten" if it is lost (overwritten,
degraded, or inaccessible) or cannot be retrieved (squirrel phenomena).
1072
19. w Information which can be retrieved may be accurately or inaccurately
recalled. In other words, it may be a faithful or unfaithful reproduction of
what was observed and registered. Information may be distorted or falsified
because it was too emotionally charged and distressing in its original form.
Whether or not conscious of the fact, the individual prefers not to remember
information associated with humiliation.
w The individual may be lying. For example, a person who has committed a
serious sexual offence of which he is deeply ashamed may have suppressed
certain memories of it or he may be able to recall the whole event but prefer
to edit what information he imparts to others.
w Lying (deliberate falsehood) must, however, be distinguished from guessing
and confabulation. Confabulation involves filling in deficits in memory
with false responses or information. It differs from lying in that the person is
not consciously attempting to deceive. Confabulation may be a feature of
amnesic syndromes such as Korsakoff's syndrome and dementia.
MOOD, AFFECT AND EMOTIONAL STATES
Affect is the way in which a person is emotionally affected by an idea or perception.
However, some psychiatrists use the words affect and mood interchangeably while
others use "mood" as a term for the prevailing emotional tone (equivalent to affect),
referring to the underlying, sustained, mood as the "mood state." Some simply lump
together every kind of emotional distress (depression, elation, anger, irritability,
panic, fear, anxiety) under the general rubric of "the patient's mood." The approach
taken here is to restrict the term mood to states of depression or elation; the term
affect to emotional responsiveness; and to deal with other emotions, such as anger,
separately. This is because many of these other emotions may or may not be asso-
ciated with depression or elation and are commonly seen in people whose mood, as
defined, is normal.
AFFECT
A person's affect is how he appears to be emotionally affected by an idea or
perception. For example, he seems happy, sad, or indifferent. A person whose mood
is normal may nevertheless be profoundly affected emotionally by some idea or
perception. Psychiatrists are particularly interested in whether a person's emotional
responsiveness is impaired. Affect is often described as being flat (absent or very
limited emotional range); blunted (severe lack of normal emotional sensitivity);
shallow or restricted (reduced); appropriate, harmonious or congruous; inapp-
ropriate or incongruous; or labile (unstable). Incongruous affect describes the
incongruity between what a person is saying and his affect. For example, a patient
laughs or displays no concern when recounting how his imaginary persecutors
intend to kill him. Apathy is emotional indifference and, as such, it is virtually
indistinguishable from flat or blunted affect. It is common in depression and certain
forms of schizophrenia although resignation, rather than true indifference, often
1073
20. better describes the patient's lack of responsiveness. Apathy must therefore be
distinguished from the hopelessness which is often the final stage of depression and
also from La Belle Indifference (literally, "beautiful indifference"), a sublime resig-
nation to distressing symptoms which are the product of hysteria.
MOOD
Mood is the pervasive and sustained emotion which colours an individual's whole
personality and perception of events. Consequently, it is sometimes described as
sustained affect and mood disorders may inaccurately be said to involve a morbid
change of affect. The expression euthymic mood describes a normal or equable
mood. Inferences about mood generally stem from present observations and past
events.
Heightened mood
Various words are used to describe the features of heightened mood, many of them
essentially interchangeable. Hyperthymia is a tendency to be overcheerful and un-
realistically optimistic. Elation consists of feelings of euphoria, triumph, immense
self-satisfaction or optimism. Euphoria is an exaggerated feeling of physical or
emotional well-being seen in organic mental states and in toxic and drug-induced
states. Exaltation is an excessively intensified sense of well-being seen in manic
states. Ecstasy describes a state of elation beyond reason and control or a trance
state of overwhelming (often religious) fervour. Grandiosity, although not usually
bracketed with mood, describes feelings of tremendous importance, characterised by
an inflated appraisal of one's worth, power, knowledge, importance, or identity, and
commonly expressed as absurd exaggerations. Extreme grandiosity may attain
delusional proportions and is seen in mania and schizophrenia.
Depressed mood
Dysthymia is a long-standing tendency to be sad and miserable and a person with
this outlook on life is sometimes said to have a dysthymic personality. Depression
describes feelings characterised by sadness, apathy, pessimism and a sense of
loneliness. Melancholia is simply the Latin word for melancholy and is essentially
synonymous with depression. Anhedonia is a feature of depression and refers to an
inability to experience pleasure in acts that normally are pleasurable.
Fluctuating Mood
Cyclothymia, a term invented by Kahlbaum, describes a personality characteristic
typified by marked changes of mood (cyclothymic personality). Lability of mood is
emotional instability, a rapidly changing mood. The person affected may laugh one
minute and cry the next without there being any corresponding change in external
stimuli to account for that.
Inappropriate mood
Mood-congruent psychotic features are delusions or hallucinations the content of
which is entirely consistent with the individual's depressed or manic mood. Thus, if
the individual's mood is depressed, the content of the delusions or hallucinations
involve themes of personal inadequacy, guilt, disease, death, nihilism, or deserved
punishment. Likewise, if the mood is manic, their content involves themes of
1074
21. inflated worth, power, knowledge, or identity or special relationship to a deity or a
famous person. Conversely, mood-incongruent psychotic features are delusions or
hallucinations the content of which is inconsistent with either a depressed or a manic
mood. If a distinction is drawn between a person's affect and his mood, the patient
may instead be described as having an incongruous or inappropriate affect.
OTHER EMOTIONAL STATES
Many other terms are used to describe an individual's emotional state, among them
anxiety, fear, agitation, restlessness, panic, and irritability. The customary distinction
between the first two of them used to be that fear always had an object (whether a
situation or thing) whereas anxiety was fear without an object or dread. Unfort-
unately, the current definitions of anxiety in the international classifications have
eroded this useful distinction.
Anxiety
Anxiety is characterised by an apprehension, tension, or uneasiness that stems from
the anticipation of danger. The associated symptoms include tachycardia (abnormal
rapidity of heart beat), palpitations, breathlessness, and light-headedness. Both of the
main international classifications distinguish between anxiety which is tied to or
focused on some particular situation (specific anxiety) or object (phobia) and
generalised anxiety where no such external triggering factor is apparent (free-
floating anxiety). The ICD classification also distinguishes between trait anxiety
and state anxiety, the former being an enduring aspect of personality and the latter a
temporary disorder.
Fear
Phobia denotes a persistent irrational fear of, and desire to avoid, a particular object
or situation. In Agoraphobia, the fear is one of going into open spaces and of
entering public places: the patient is filled with dread at the prospect of venturing
out of his home and may experience panic attacks. In some cases, what initially
seems to be agoraphobia may transpire to be claustrophobia (a fear of enclosed
spaces). Thus, a patient may not venture out of his home because of the suffocating,
claustrophobic, effects of being in a crowded shopping centre rather than because of
a fear of open spaces. If the individual has a chronic abnormal fear that he is ill or
diseased, this is termed hypochondriasis.
Irritability
Anxiety may be expressed as irritability. The depressed patient may become anxious
about his inability to respond positively to the problems surrounding him, which
makes him anxious and often increasingly irritable. Conversely, sustained, unremit-
ting anxiety and irritability have a depressive effect over a period of time because
the individual's performance is constantly undermined and dejection sets in.
Agitation and restlessness
In other cases, uncontrollable anxiety or fear surface in the form of motor restless-
ness (agitation) which, as with tics, both reflects and appears to partially alleviate the
underlying state of tension. The ICD classification reserves the term "agitation" for
1075
22. cases where anxiety is accompanied by "marked restlessness and excessive motor
activity" — states referred to in the DSM classification as psychomotor agitation.
There is a restless, usually non-productive and repetitious, inability to keep still as a
result of the underlying tension. The patient may pace up and down, pick at his
clothes or skin, be unable to concentrate or relax and so start but not complete
various tasks. In severe cases, there may be shouting or loud complaining.
Restlessness caused by certain drugs may mimic agitation (see akathisia, 1067).
Panic
A further way of dealing with anxiety or fear is to attempt to repress it. Anxiety or
fear may surface in discrete periods of sudden onset and be accompanied by physical
symptoms — panic attacks. A panic attack is a sudden, overwhelming anxiety or
fear, sometimes accompanied by an intense fear of dying and associated with
particular times, places, thoughts or ideas. Hyperventilation occurs with fast,
shallow, breathing and a range of other physical symptoms.
Aggression and hostility
Fear may lead to aggression and hostility. Biologically, aggressiveness is a
component of animal behaviour which is released in particular conditions in order to
satisfy vital needs or to eliminate an environmental threat. In the case of patients
who are irrationally fearful, aggression and hostility perform the same function as in
cases where there is an objectively real threat to the individual's safety. The
individual attempts to eliminate fear by eliminating its cause.
DISORDERED SPEECH OR THOUGHT
Thinking is a form of activity engaged in by a biological organism whenever
habitual patterns of action are disrupted and the function of thought is to solve the
problems which give rise to it.30
An individual's thoughts may be kept private or
expressed. Expression may be verbal or non-verbal. A thought may be expressed
non-verbally by an action, an omission to act, a bodily movement such as a grimace
or gesticulation, or a display of emotion such as anger. The movement of muscles to
produce speech is an activity, a form of behaviour, just as much as is the movement
1076
30
See J. Dewey, Experience and Nature (Open Court, 1925).
ANXIETY
FEAR
IRRITABILITY
AGITATION
PANIC
AGGRESSION
DEPRESSION
23. of muscles in the limbs to produce motion or to perform some physical act. Unless
thoughts are deliberately concealed, or their articulation is impaired by a poor
vocabulary or damage to the mechanics involved in producing speech, its flow and
content correspond to the flow of the individual's thoughts, so that disordered speech
frequently reflects disordered thought. More particularly, "we are subjectively aware
of our thought process being a stream or a flow ... thoughts are capable of
acceleration and slowing, of eddies and calms, of precipitous falls, of increased
volume of flow, of blockages."31
The point, though obvious, is nevertheless
important because it focuses attention on the fact that many of the terms used to
describe abnormal thought processes on the one hand and abnormal speech on the
other are for all practical purposes synonymous. Thus, while some textbooks refer to
paucity of thought, one can just as well say that the patient's presentation is marked
by poverty of speech if the former conclusion is based only on his observed speech
output. If a person's speech is abnormal, this may be because the amount of speech is
outside normal bounds; because the production of speech is impaired; because his
choice of words is abnormal; because the succession and connection of ideas is
illogical; or because its content is abnormal. That being so, abnormalities of speech
and thought are dealt with in the following order—
w Abnormal volume (amount) and rate (tempo) of speech
w Abnormal delivery of speech (articulation)
w Abnormal choice or use of words (vocabulary)
w Abnormal juxtaposition of words, or the ideas conveyed by them, in phrases
and sentences (syntax and the association of ideas)
w Abnormal content of thought (delusions, over-valued ideas, etc.)
THE VOLUME (AMOUNT) AND RATE (TEMPO) OF SPEECH
The amount of speech used may be excessive or restricted. In extreme cases, an
individual may be mute or talk incessantly. When seeking to establish the cause of
this, it is important to establish whether the amount of speech varies according to the
subject under discussion and whether the structure of speech is normal or its rhythm
or inflexion disturbed. Due allowance must be made if English is not the patient's
usual language and for other factors influencing communication, such as sedating
drugs.
No speech or little speech which is slow and laboured
Retarded thought (thinking which proceeds slowly towards its goal) is reflected in
the individual's speech and when the amount of speech is very limited this is
sometimes referred to as poverty of speech. In extreme cases, the patient is mute,
being either unable or unwilling to speak. Mutism may be seen in cases of catatonic
schizophrenia and severe depression. The term akinetic mutism describes a state of
disturbed consciousness due to a tumour of the third ventricle, as a result of which
the patient is mute and almost totally unresponsive. Aphonia is a total loss of the
1077
31
A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind (Baillière Tindall, 1988), p.108.
24. voice which cannot be accounted for by any disease or injury of the larynx
("voice-box"). It is usually sudden in onset and caused by emotional stress.
Speech is fast, rapid, accelerated
Copious, excessive, production of speech is known as volubility or logorrhoea. It
may be seen in mania or schizophrenic disorders. Where the amount and rate of a
patient's speech is increased so that he is difficult to interrupt, this is referred to as
pressure of speech. In flight of ideas, there is a nearly continuous flow of acceler-
ated speech with no central direction. The patient jumps from one topic to another,
his stream of thought directed by chance associations between each fragment of
conversation. In some cases, this flitting from subject to subject may be determined
not by any logical relationship or progression in terms of subject-matter or meaning
but by the way words rhyme or by similarities in sound — clang associations or
clanging.
Poverty of speech
Pressure of speech
Retarded thinking
Accelerated
thought
Flight of ideas
Logorrhoea
Mutism
THE DELIVERY OF SPEECH (ARTICULATION)
Whether or not the volume and velocity of thought and therefore speech is normal,
its delivery may nevertheless be abnormal. For example, the individual may stammer
or stutter, that is show repeated hesitation or delay in uttering words. Dys- arthria
(disturbed articulation) is difficulty in speech production caused by disease or
damage to the physical apparatus of speech or to the nerve pathways controlling that
apparatus; it is the vocal expression which causes problems. Dysarthria is a common
feature of many degenerative conditions such as multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's
disease and Huntington's chorea, and it may a side-effect of prescribed medication
(e.g. tardive dyskinesia). In other cases, the cause may be more mun- dane, for
example alcohol intoxication or ill-fitting dentures.
Dysphonia
Dysphonia has a more restricted meaning than dysarthria and refers only to defects
of sound production caused by some disease or damage to the voice-box (larynx) or
to the nerve supply to the laryngeal muscles. In cases of depression, the patient may
speak with a monotonous voice while manic patients often talk in a particularly
animated way.
1078
25. THE CHOICE OF WORDS AND VOCABULARY
The way certain words or phrases are used may sometimes be distinctive, because
they are repeated, or clearly have a special significance for the individual, or
represent words which he has invented. More generally, their usage may suggest a
limited vocabulary and hence limited education, limited innate intellectual ability,
loss of intellectual ability (e.g. dementia), or a poor grasp of the language in
someone for whom English is not their first language.
Descriptive terms
Echolalia, verbigeration and perseveration describe different kinds of repetition of
words and phrases—
w Perseveration denotes the persistent repetition of words, phrases or ideas.
The initial thought, or train of thought, is maintained despite a change of
topic, as in the following example: "Q. What is your name? "A. John Smith.
Q. Where do you live? "A. John Smith." Perseveration is most commonly
seen in organic mental disorders, schizophrenia, and other psychotic
disorders.
w Where the patient instead persistently repeats back a syllable, word or phrase
spoken by the interviewer, rather than a word or phrase previously spoken
by himself, this is known as echolalia. Typical echolalia tends to be repet-
itive and persistent. The other person's tone and accent may also be echoed,
often with a mocking, mumbling, or staccato intonation. Echolalia may
occur in cases of schizophrenia, autism, mental impairment, or organic
disorder.
w Verbigeration is the stereotyped and superficially meaningless repetition of
words or sentences, which is not an echoing of something said to the patient.
w Where a patient uses a certain word or phrase repeatedly throughout a
conversation, such that it is clear that it has a special importance or meaning
for him, such phrases are known as stock phrases.
w A neologism is a new word invented by the patient, often a portmanteau.
For example, the word "bancid" may be an amalgam of the words "bad" and
"rancid." Neologisms may be observed in schizophrenia and other psychotic
disorders.
w Neologisms should be distinguished from the situation where a patient has
difficulty finding the correct word or where he uses a known word in an
idiosyncratic and not entirely correct way (metonyms).
w The term coprolalia describes the repeated involuntary utterance of socially
unacceptable or obscene words and it is sometimes seen in de la Tourette's
syndrome. However, most often, the repeated use of swear words and other
obscenities is simply voluntary or habitual, a sign of poor social upbringing
rather than mental disorder.
1079
26. Language disorders
A patient's choice of words, or his inability to remember a word, may in rare cases
form part of a more pervasive cerebral disorder and be associated with impaired
capacity to read or write. Aphasia is, strictly speaking, a complete loss of the ability
to select the words with which to speak and write caused by damage to the regions
of the brain concerned with speech and its comprehension. Dysphasia denotes a
disturbance rather than a complete absence of these previously acquired language
skills. There are several types of aphasia but no agreement as to how to classify
them. Agraphia is caused by damage to the cerebrum and signifies a loss or im-
paired ability to write in a person whose hand and arm muscles function normally.
Agraphia usually occurs as part of aphasia or, rarely, by itself. Alexia (word-
blindness) denotes an inability to recognise and name written words in a person who
was previously literate, the disorder being caused by damage to the cerebrum. Most
often, such alexia occurs as part of aphasia.
THE STRUCTURE AND FORM OF THOUGHT
Minor defects in the form or structure of spoken thoughts may be attributable to
inadequate education, fatigue, anxiety, boredom, frustration, or intellectual impair-
ment. Broken or fragmented speech may similarly merely demonstrate a lack of
command of English in someone for whom English is not their first language.
However, in some cases, the patient's answers suggest that his thought processes are
so disturbed that he cannot grasp the point of the question. Alternatively, the way in
which words are formed into sentences may be highly idiosyncratic, the successive
ideas conveyed by them being conjoined to form phrases or sentences which have
little logical connection. They do not appear to form a chain of reasoning.
Failure to grasp the purpose of a question
Even though a question is simply expressed and unambiguous, it may be apparent
that the other person has not understood its meaning or purpose, that is the inform-
ation which it was intended to elicit. This may be because the person has inter-
preted the question too literally and is capable of thinking only in concrete terms —
concrete thinking. Concrete thinking is seen in schizophrenia and it is charac-
terised by literalness, an inability to abstract or to form the whole from its parts.
Rational or conceptual thinking
Rational or conceptual thinking involves the use of logic to solve problems. It
involves recognizing and classifying a problem so that reason can be applied to find
a solution.32
All reasoning represents a logical association of ideas. The thoughts and
ideas developed in a patient's answer may flow logically in that there is an obvious
connection or "association" between an expressed idea and the thoughts immediately
preceding and following it. Conscious thinking therefore has a goal towards which
clear and relevant thoughts move. Along the fringe of this main theme
(determinative idea) are numerous less clearly defined thoughts or associations
running parallel to the main theme.33
1080
33
Ibid., Chap. 8.
32
A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind (Baillière Tindall, 1988), p.107.
27. Loosening of associations
It is sometimes the case that there is no logical association between the various
thoughts expressed in response to a question. The successive thoughts, sentences
and topics are not obviously goal-directed or connected in a chain of thought. The
patient fails to answer the question posed. This lack of association may vary in its
severity. Marked inability to consciously develop a chain of thought is considered to
be indicative of mental disorder and, more particularly, a key feature of
schizophrenia. The terminology used to describe disturbed association of ideas is,
however, not firmly established. For example, some psychiatrists use the term
loosening of associations or tangentiality of thought to refer to any inability to
arrange successive ideas in order, whatever the severity of the disturbance. Subject
to this caveat, disturbed associations between ideas may be categorised as follows—
w In its mildest form, conversation is vague and answers to questions
"woolly." Tangentiality means replying to a question in an oblique or even
irrelevant manner.
w In some cases, there is such a loose connection between the successive
thoughts expressed by successive sentences that the goal is never attained —
loosening of associations. Successive thoughts are either unrelated or only
obliquely related although the speaker is unaware that the statements which
he is juxtaposing lack any meaningful relationship. Loosening of assoc-
iations therefore represents a disturbance in the association of thoughts
which renders speech inexact, vague, diffused or unfocused. The term
knight's move thinking is also sometimes used to describe such odd,
tangential, associations between ideas.
w When loosening of associations is severe, speech may be incoherent. The
speech is mostly not understandable owing to a lack of any logical con-
nection between words, phrases, or sentences; the excessive use of
incomplete sentences; excessive irrelevancies or abrupt changes in subject
matter; idiosyncratic word usage; and distorted grammar. Incoherence may
be seen in organic mental disorders and schizophrenia but the term is not
used if abrupt shifts in topics are associated with a nearly continuous flow of
accelerated, manic, speech. This is referred to as flight of ideas.
w At its most severe, not only is there no logical association between
successive thoughts but a lack of association between successive words,
which form a meaningless jumble. This is known as word salad.
1081
Question Answer
GoalStart / finish
Main theme
Associated ideas
Associated ideas
28. Circumstantial thought
By convention, a distinction is drawn between loosening of associations and
circumstantiality of thought. Circumstantial thought describes speech which, al-
though relevant to the subject being discussed and eventually answering the question
is indirect and delayed in reaching the point because of unnecessary, tedious details
and parenthetical remarks. Circumstantial replies or statements may be prolonged for
many minutes if the speaker is not interrupted and urged to get to the point.
Circumstantial thought is also differentiated from poverty of ideas in which speech
conveys little information because of vagueness, empty repetitions, or use of stereo-
typed or obscure phrases: the individual speaks at some length but commonly does
not give adequate information to answer a question.34
Thought blocking and derailment of thoughts
Loosening of associations is further distinguished from thought blocking and derail-
ment of thought although all affect the patient's ability to follow through a chain of
ideas. In derailment of thought, there is a sudden deviation in the train of thought,
as if a train travelling from one station to another (here from question to answer) had
been derailed. In thought blocking, the patient's stream of thought, and therefore
speech, suddenly stops in mid-flow for no obvious reason. He is either unable to
account for the stoppage or attributes it to his thoughts being interfered with by a
third party. Such blocking aside, the person may be able to pursue a chain of
thought. Thought blocking of this kind differs from mere reticence or defensive-
ness. If a person is simply being defensive, the structure of his speech is normal and
some questions are answered promptly. It is only when a sensitive subject is touched
upon that any significant hesitancy or pause is apparent in midstream. The patient
may at the same time become aroused, anxious, quiet or elevated.
THE CONTENT OF THOUGHT (BELIEFS AND IDEAS)
Even if the structure and form of a person's thought, and therefore speech, appears
normal nevertheless the ideas expressed by him (the content of his thought) may be
markedly abnormal. When a person has a thought, an idea, he means that he is
conscious of having it. Thoughts of which a person is conscious may or may not be
verbalised and they may be memorised or forgotten.
Beliefs, ideas and feelings
A belief is a thought which is considered by its holder to have an explanatory value
so that the relevance of other thoughts and perceptions is determined by reference to
it and the framework which it forms together with the individual's other beliefs. It is
therefore an idea which, having been submitted to scrutiny in the light of available
evidence, is deemed to account for observed phenomena and so to have an explan a-
tory and predictive quality. An idée fixe is an unshakeable preconception or convic-
tion. A "feeling" is a sub-conscious, or barely conscious, thought which is evoked by
another thought or perception (something seen, heard, touched, or smelt) but cannot
be put into words. A suspicion is a feeling or an idea falling short of a belief that
some other person intends to harm the individual or his interests. This commonly
leads to reticence, guardedness, defensiveness or secrecy on the individual's part.
1082
34
A. Sims, Symptoms in the Mind (Baillière Tindall, 1988), p.134.
29. Delusions
In some cases, a belief may be so obviously false and irrational that it constitutes a
delusion. A delusion is a belief which is bizarre; not true to fact; cannot be cor-
rected by an appeal to reason; and is out of harmony with the holder's educational or
cultural background. The fact that it is manifestly inconsistent with beliefs which the
individual is known to have previously held, although not a defining feature, is often
the final conclusive evidence that the belief is delusional.
Systematised delusions
Delusional ideas may be fleeting in nature, changeable and unconnected with each
other — unsystematized delusions — or they may form part of a logical fixed
system of such beliefs — systematized delusions. An example of the latter is that of
a man who, having failed his bar examination, developed the delusion that this
occurred because of a conspiracy involving the university and the bar association.
He then attributed all other difficulties in his social and occupational life to this
continuing conspiracy.
Whether delusions are evidence of disordered thought processes
Opinion varies as to whether the holding of a delusional belief is in itself evidence
of disordered thought processes. On the one hand, a delusional belief may represent
a logical conclusion given the sensory information which that part of the brain
involved in interpreting sensory data believes it has received "in its in-tray" for
actioning. In this context, one may take the example of a person who "hears" a
neighbour's voice, indistinguishable from that person's real voice, discussing how to
poison him. Arguably, the belief that the neighbour is trying to harm him is a logical
conclusion to reach on the available "evidence." Against this, many delusional
beliefs are clearly based on illogical thinking. Thus, the logic of a patient who writes
to the Prime Minister about some political crisis which is then resolved is clearly
disturbed if he draws the conclusion that his personal intervention was responsible
for the change in Government policy. There are endless variations on the theme but
they all involve drawing conclusions from false premises: A writes to B about an
event and the event takes a different course. A ascribes the change to his
intervention. Alternatively, A writes letter B and learns that C has written to D and
forms association between events A and C or between himself and the writer of
letter C — paralogic thinking. Even here it may be argued that such delusional
"ideas" are logical given the prior existence of a primary grandiose delusional
"belief" about one's own importance, a belief which then provides the framework for
future ideas and reasoning.
Autistic thinking
In many cases, the beliefs which provide such frameworks are the product of what
Bleuler called autistic thinking: a form of thinking characterised by a turning away
from reality, uncommunicativeness, and an excessive indulgence in fantasy. The
individual is preoccupied with an inner, private world and, although this gratifies his
various unfulfilled fantasies, it results in a total disregard of reality. As a result, his
ability to relate to other people and his environment is markedly impaired. The mode
of thought which originally compensated for the disappointments of life, by
reinventing reality, becomes an established way of life.
1083
30. Classification of delusions
Delusions are commonly categorised according to their content (e.g. grandiose
delusions); whether or not they are systematised; whether they are mood-congruent
or mood-incongruent (1074), and whether they are primary or secondary. With
regard to the latter, a hallucination may give rise to a "secondary" delusional belief
that the perception is true; it was "so real, it must be true." If the delusion cannot be
related to some prior event it is said to be primary or "autochothonous."
A delusion pertaining to the functioning of one's body,
e.g. a false belief that one is pregnant despite being
post-menopausal.
Somatic delusion
A delusional belief that the patient himself, or some other
person, institution, or group, is being attacked, harassed,
cheated, persecuted, or conspired against. In cases of
paranoid schizophrenia, such beliefs may be associated
with related psychotic phenomena, such as auditory
hallucinations or passivity phenomena.
Persecutory delusion
A belief that oneself, others, or the world no longer exist.
Often present in very serious depressive disorders.
Nihilistic delusion
A delusion the content of which involves an exaggerated
sense of one's importance, power, knowledge, or identity.
It may have a religious, somatic, or other theme.
Grandiose delusion
The delusion that one's sexual partner is unfaithful. Also
known as "Othello's syndrome."
Delusional jealousy
A delusion that events, objects, or other people in the
person's immediate environment have a particular and
unusual significance, usually of a negative or pejorative
nature. If the delusion of reference involves a persecutory
theme, then a delusion of persecution is present as well.
Delusion of reference
A delusion that the person is, or will be, bereft of all, or
virtually all, material possessions.
Delusion of poverty
A tactile hallucination involving the sensation of
something creeping or crawling on or under the skin may
give rise to a secondary delusion of being infested by
insects or worms.
Delusion of infestation
A delusional belief that one is sinful or wicked or respon-
sible for certain distressing events, e.g. that one is respon-
sible for the suicide of another patient. Guilt is
self-inflicted, in contrast to shame which primarily
depends upon the opinion others are perceived to have of
the individual.
Delusion of guilt
A delusion in which feelings, impulses, thoughts, or
actions are experienced as not one's own but imposed by
an external force.
Delusion of being controlled
COMMON DELUSIONAL THEMES
1084
31. Delusional beliefs about interference with thoughts
The central theme of the following delusional beliefs is the belief that the individ-
ual's thought processes are being interfered with by some other person or force —
w Thought control describes a belief that one's thoughts are being controlled
by some other person, persons, or outside forces.
w Thought insertion is a delusion that thoughts have been, or are being
placed, in one's mind by some other person, persons or outside forces. These
intrusive thoughts are experienced by the patient as alien. One of Schneider's
first-rank symptoms of schizophrenia.
w Thought withdrawal is when the individual experiences his own thoughts
being withdrawn from his mind or otherwise appropriated by an external
agency.
w Thought broadcasting is the belief that one's own thoughts are being
broadcast to the outside world or otherwise made public knowledge.
The individual therefore believes that his thoughts are being controlled, infiltrated,
poisoned, stolen or made public. Apart from the central idea of interference with
thought processes, it can be seen that these beliefs have two other aspects in
common. Firstly, the nature of the delusions are essentially paranoid since they are
characterised by a belief that the individual is being harmed by some other person or
agency. Consequently, there is a significant potential for violence to any individual
thought to be involved in causing this harm. Secondly, and to some extent like all
paranoid delusions, the beliefs are characterised by passivity. External agencies have
managed to penetrate the individual's mind. The boundaries between the inner and
outer world have been breached; not only external events but his own inner thoughts
are no longer under his own control. Thought blocking (1082) may give rise to the
delusional explanatory idea that this blockage is due to interference with the
subject's thoughts.
IDEAS FALLING SHORT OF BEING DELUSIONAL BELIEFS
In most cases, it is clear whether or not an idea is delusional in nature. However,
care must be taken to differentiate such ideas from value judgements, over-valued
ideas and, more particularly, ideas of reference.
Value judgements
According to the DSM glossary, when a false belief involves an extreme value
judgement, it is regarded as a delusion only when the judgement is so extreme as to
defy credibility. If someone claims he or she is terrible and has disappointed his or
her family, this is generally not regarded as a delusion even if an objective assess-
ment of the situation would lead observers to think otherwise; but if someone claims
he or she is the worst sinner in the world, this would generally be considered a
delusional conviction.
1085
32. Thoughts disproportionate (over-valued ideas)
An over-valued idea is an unreasonable, sustained, idea which is maintained less
firmly than a delusional belief. It differs from an obsessional thought in that the
person holding the overvalued idea does not recognise its absurdity and thus does
not struggle against it. Ideas of reference are one kind of over-valued idea and the
term denotes an incorrect idea that casual incidents and external events directly refer
to oneself which stops short of being a delusion of reference (1084).
OTHER ABNORMAL THOUGHTS
Apart from delusions, a person's thoughts may be abnormal in a number of other
ways which have already been considered. An obsessional thought (1062) is one
which a person cannot prevent himself from repeatedly, insistently, having albeit
that the content of the thought is not delusional. A phobia (1075) is a morbid,
persistent and irrational fear of, and desire to avoid, a particular object or situation,
associated with extreme anxiety.
PERCEPTUAL DISTURBANCES
A person may be unable to perceive or recognise something which one would nor-
mally expect him to be able to sense. For example, an individual cannot recognise
objects despite adequate sensory information about them reaching the brain via the
eyes, ears or through touch — agnosia. For an object to be recognised, the sensory
information about it must be interpreted, which involves the recall of memorised in-
formation about similar objects. Agnosia is caused by damage to the areas of the
brain involved in these interpretative and recall functions and may occur following
head injury or a stroke. It is, however, rare. More commonly, perceptual disturb-
ances involve an individual seemingly perceiving something which is not there.
HALLUCINATIONS
An hallucination is a sensory perception occurring without external stimulation of
the relevant sensory organ. A hallucination has the immediate sense of reality of a
true perception. Hallucinations are usually categorised according to the sensory mo-
dality in which they occur and there may or may not be a delusional interpretation of
the hallucinatory experience. For example, a person experiencing auditory hall-
ucinations may, or may not, recognise that the voices are imaginary. If he does not,
and he is convinced that the source of his sensory experiences has an independent
physical reality, the hallucination has given rise to a secondary delusion. Transient
hallucinatory experiences are common in people without mental disorder and many
people experience auditory or visual hallucinations while falling asleep (hypnagogic
perceptions) or awakening from sleep (hypnopompic perceptions). Everyone has
experiences akin to hallucinations during sleep (dream images).
Auditory hallucination
An auditory hallucination is a hallucination of sound, most commonly of voices.
Auditory hallucinations may be organised — commenting or commanding — or
1086
33. elementary, such as a buzzing sound, fragments of music, or the sound of a tele-
phone or door-bell. Auditory hallucinations which consist of hearing voices are
often described as being in the first-person ("I am wicked"), in the second-person
("you are wicked"), or in the third-person ("he is wicked"). Thought echo is the
experience of one's thoughts being repeated or echoed (but not spoken aloud) within
one's head: the repeated thought, though identical in content, may be felt as slightly
altered in quality. Echoed thoughts of this kind may be harbingers of auditory
hallucinations.
Distortions of real perceptions
Auditory phenomena which are not classifiable as hallucinations may nevertheless
be significant. For example, a patient with temporal lobe epilepsy may experience a
sound as suddenly very remote and distant, or alternatively suddenly very loud,
perhaps as loud as thunder.
Gustatory hallucination
A gustatory hallucination is an hallucination of taste, such as a metallic taste, often
accompanied by chewing, lip smacking or swallowing movements. Gustatory
hallucinations have great significance for the diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy. In
cases of paranoid schizophrenia, the patient may imagine that his food is being
poisoned or tampered and this belief give rise to a vague idea that the food is odd in
some way. However, there is rarely an hallucination as such.
Olfactory hallucination
An olfactory hallucination is one involving smell and, again, it has great significance
for the diagnosis of temporal lobe epilepsy. In such cases, the smell is typically
described as being similar to burning rubber or burning cabbage.
Somatic hallucination
A somatic hallucination is an hallucination involving the false perception of a
physical experience localised within the body. For example, a perception that
electricity is running through the body. Somatic hallucinations are often distin-
guished from tactile hallucinations, in which the sensation is usually related to the
skin, and kinaesthetic hallucinations, where the sensation relates to the muscles or
joints.
Tactile or haptic hallucination
A tactile or haptic hallucination involves the sense of touch, often something on or
under the skin. Almost invariably, the symptom is associated with a delusional
interpretation of the sensation. For example, a person may say that the devil is
sticking pins into his flesh. Formication (formica being the Latin word for an ant) is
a particular kind of tactile hallucination, involving the sensation of something
creeping or crawling on or under the skin. It may be a feature of schizophrenia or
withdrawal from alcohol, cocaine or morphine. There is often a delusional inter-
pretation of the sensation, which may be attributed to insects or worms — delusion
of infestation.
1087
34. Paraesthesia
Parietal seizures may produce numbness, tingling, feelings of heat and cold. The
seizures may then spread to contiguous areas of the body and even produce
pronounced disorders of body image.
Visceral hallucination
A visceral hallucination is literally an hallucination involving one of the organs
situated within the chest and the abdomen although the term is commonly used to
describe sensations affecting other bodily organs, e.g. a person senses that water is
dripping in his brain.
Visual hallucination
A visual hallucination is an hallucination involving sight. Visual hallucinations may
be sub-divided into those which are elementary or simple, such as flashes of light,
and those which are organised, such as the form of human figures. Elementary visual
hallucinations may be suggestive of an organic disorder. A scotoma35
may occur or,
more commonly, elementary hallucinations consisting of flashes of light, colours,
zig-zag patterns and radiating spectra. Occipital seizures may commence as visual
disturbances localised in the half-field of vision opposite to the side affected. One
view is that the visual hallucinations of schizophrenia are experienced as often
during the day as at night whereas such experiences are more common at night in
mood or organic disorders.
Illusions
Visual hallucinations must be distinguished from illusions and also from normal
thought processes that are exceptionally vivid. An illusion is a mental impression of
sensory vividness arising out of a misinterpretation of an external stimulus. For
example, mistaking a piece of scrunched cotton for a spider or a cat for a rat. They
are therefore misperceptions or misinterpretations of real stimuli, in contrast to an
hallucination when any external stimulus which may account for the perception is
absent. Illusions may be caused by anxiety, panic, tiredness, certain drugs or damage
to the brain.
Micropsia and macropsia
A Lilliputian hallucination is a visual hallucination in which the hallucinated visual
material appears very small. This is different from micropsia in which actual objects
appear smaller than normal.36
Macropsia is a false perception that an actual object is
larger than it really is. It may occur following drug intoxication or as a feature of
temporal lobe epilepsy.
PERCEPTIONS OF TIME, SPACE, PLACE AND SELF
A number of other sensations not classified as hallucinations relate to the individ-
ual's orientation — his perception of himself in relation to time, space, and place —
and result in a feeling of disengagement from the world or disorientation. A person
1088
36
W.A. Lishman, Organic Psychiatry, The Psychological Consequences of Cerebral Disorder
(Blackwell Scientific Publications, 2nd ed., 1987), p.219.
35
An abnormal blind spot in the visual field.